scholarly journals Prognostic impact of cytogenetic aberrations in AL amyloidosis patients after high-dose melphalan: a long-term follow-up study

Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (4) ◽  
pp. 594-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tilmann Bochtler ◽  
Ute Hegenbart ◽  
Christina Kunz ◽  
Axel Benner ◽  
Christoph Kimmich ◽  
...  

Key Points Translocation t(11;14) confers a favorable prognosis in AL amyloidosis patients treated with HDM.

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 3048-3048
Author(s):  
Efstathios Kastritis ◽  
Maria Roussou ◽  
Magdalini Migkou ◽  
Maria Gavriatopoulou ◽  
Constantinos Pamboukas ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3048 Until recently, patients with AL amyloidosis had limited treatment options, especially those who were not candidates for high dose therapy, those with severe cardiac involvement or patients who relapsed after initial treatment or never responded to first line alkylators with steroids. Bortezomib (B) with dexamethasone (D) has shown significant activity in patients with AL amyloidosis in patients who relapsed or even those who were refractory to initial treatment. We and others have presented data indicating that BD is active in newly diagnosed patients with AL, inducing responses rapidly but also associated with high rates of complete responses. However, data about long-term follow-up of these patients are limited. Thus, we updated a series of 24, previously untreated patients who received frontline BD. In all patients, treatment started with B at a dose of 1.3 mg/m2 on days 1, 4, 8 & 11 and D was given for 4 consecutive days at a dose of 40 mg per day (days 1–4), every 21 days for up to 6 cycles. The median age of these patients was 70 years (range 42–82) and 46% were males. The median number of involved organs was 2; heart was involved in 83% and kidneys in 63%. Fifty-seven percent were Mayo stage II and 26% were Mayo stage III while 67% had impaired ECOG performance status ≥ 2. The first patient started treatment with BD on September 2005. A median of 5 cycles of BD was given (range 1–6) and 57% of patients received the planned 6 cycles. On intent to treat and according to criteria published by Gertz et al in 2005, 77% of patients achieved a hematologic response including 36% with a hematologic CR. Most of the responses occurred after the first cycle of BD (median time to first response <1 month), while a median of two cycles of BD was needed for CR (median time to CR was 42 days, range 21–84). In 54% of patients an organ response was recorded: 47% of patients with a cardiac involvement achieved a cardiac response and 77% had a reduction of NTproBNP ≥ 30% (which was at least 300 pg/ml), while 60% of patients with a kidney involvement achieved an organ response. Three patients received high dose melphalan with autologous stem cell transplant (HDM-ASCT) after they had completed 6 cycles of BD, 2 while in CR and one in PR. All these 3 patients had achieved organ responses before ASCT. The median follow up for all patients is 31 months. Thirteen patients (54%) have died; most of them due to complications of cardiac amyloidosis and the median survival is estimated to exceed 36 months (patients who underwent ASCT were censored at the time of HDM). Baseline NT-proBNP was the most significant factor independently associated with survival. There were no differences in the baseline characteristics of patients who achieved CR compared to those who achieved a PR as best hematologic response. The median follow up for patients who achieved a CR is 31 months (range 2–55 months). One patient died early due to complications of cardiac amyloidosis, while she had achieved a CR. Among the rest of the patients who achieved a CR but did not receive HDM, all remain alive and without progression for a median of 32 months. Similarly none of the patients who received HDM has relapsed. Among patients who achieved a PR as their best response, 4 (50%) have relapsed and the median progression free survival (PFS) for these patients is 9 months and their median survival is 34 months. In conclusion, BD induces high rates of CRs, in unselected, patients with previously untreated AL amyloidosis, most of whom had features of advanced disease and elevated cardiobiomarkers. i.e. patients that may be excluded form clinical trials. The severity of cardiac involvement remains the most important prognostic factor despite the rapid responses and the high rates of hematologic CRs. It is also of interest to note that CRs may persist even in patients who did not receive any alkylating agents or consolidation with high dose melphalan. A CR is associated with improved survival and should be the primary goal of treatment in patients with AL. Our data indicate that primary treatment with bortezomib based regimens should be evaluated in a phase III trial. Disclosures: Dimopoulos: Ortho-Biotech: Honoraria; Celgene: Honoraria; Millennium: Honoraria.


2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 8519-8519
Author(s):  
B. Barlogie ◽  
M. Attal ◽  
J. Crowley ◽  
J. Harousseau

8519 Background: Clinical trial outcomes are usually published when statistical protocol objectives have been met, with short median follow-up not exceeding 5 years. Due to treatment innovations, MM survival beyond 10 years has become more common but formal long-term results are seldom reported. Methods: IFM, SWOG and ARK provide an update of their major trials. IFM-90: 1 AT v standard therapy (STD), IFM-94: 2 v 1 AT, IFM-9902: 2AT ± THAL, IFM-9904: 2AT for high-risk MM; SWOG-9321: 1 AT v STD; TT1: 2 AT with interferon, TT2: 2AT ± THAL, TT3: 2AT + THAL + bortezomib. Results: OS clustered in 3 groups with superior outcomes for TT3/TT2/IFM-99 v TT1 v IFM-94/ IFM-90/SWOG-9321 with 5/10/15-yr estimates of 70%/50%/TE v 57%/35%/20% v 43%/25%/15% (p<0.0001). EFS also clustered in 3 groups with superior outcomes for TT3 v TT2 v remainder with estimates of 71%/TE/TE v 50%/35%/TE v 27%/ 15%/10% (p<0.0001). Among phase III trials, added THAL in TT2 increased 10-yr OS/EFS from 40%/25% to 60%/40% (p=0.04/p=0.0005); 10-yr OS was 30% v 8% with 1 v 0 AT in IFM-90 (p=0.005), 31% v 21% with 2 AT v 1 AT in IFM-94 (p=0.08), and 20% for both arms of S9321. On multivariate analysis involving 2962 patients, OS was adversely affected by B2M >=3.5mg/L (p<0.001), LDH >=ULN (p<0.001), hemoglobin <10g/dL (p=0.001) and albumin <3.5g/dL (p=0.02). 2AT (65%) and THAL (21%) both contributed independently to superior OS (p<0.001, p=0.002); among individual trials, IFM-9902 (19%) and TT2/TT3 (33%) both improved OS significantly (both p<0.001). For each of the 3 major OS clusters, 228 patients could be matched on B2M, LDH, hemoglobin and albumin, with 10-yr OS/EFS estimates of 65%/30% for the TT3/TT2/IFM-9902 group significantly exceeding 30%/15% each for the other 2 groups (p=0.001/p=0.001). Conclusions: A 15-yr EFS plateau of 10% with older trials and superior 10-yr EFS/OS estimates of 50%/35% with recent studies emphasize that cure should be a realistic trial objective in contemporary MM therapy, requiring however very long-term follow-up beyond 15 years. [Table: see text]


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 192-192 ◽  
Author(s):  
David C. Seldin ◽  
Michael Rosenzweig ◽  
Kathleen T. Finn ◽  
Salli Fennessey ◽  
Anthony Shelton ◽  
...  

Abstract AL amyloidosis is a clonal plasma cell dyscrasia in which misfolded immunoglobulin light chains deposit in tissues and produce organ failure and death. Untreated, median survival is short. Melphalan-based regimens can produce hematologic remissions and improvement in organ function; more than 20% of patients treated with high dose melphalan and autologous stem cell transplantation (HDM/SCT) have survived more than 10 years (Blood, in press). The combination of lenalidomide and dexamethasone can also produce partial and complete hematologic responses (Blood2007;109:492–496). Here we report on remission duration and long-term results of treatment in the original 34 patients and an additional 9 patients, with median follow up of 26.5 m. The median age of the 43 patients was 64 (range, 44–84), 70% were male, 67% were lambda isotype, 46% had multi-organ involvement, and 42% had cardiac involvement. 90% had received prior melphalan-based therapy; in 60% this was HDM/SCT. 14% of patients had received thalidomide and 5%, bortezomib. 10% had no prior treatment. Patients were begun at 15 mg lenalidomide per day for 21 days per month; the median tolerated dose was 10 mg. The response rate was 60% (24% CR, 36% PR); an additional 15% of patients had minor responses. Of the 8 patients who achieved a CR, 6 occurred at 3–6 months of treatment, but 2 were late (18m, 19m). 7 of 8 are alive; one died of cardiac allograft rejection. 3 of 8 have relapsed. 5 of 8 maintain remissions for 6–30 m, of which 4 of 8 continue in CR off therapy for 6–21m. Kaplan-Meier survival for all 43 patients is shown. 7 of 8 patients achieving CR had significant proteinuria: in 2 patients (29%), proteinuria resolved (2 g to 120 mg, 8.8 g to 140 mg); in 3 (43%) it improved by 50% or more; and in 2 there has been no change. Thus, lenalidomide can produce beneficial hematologic and organ responses in AL amyloidosis patients, and remissions can be durable off therapy. Further trials should be done to determine how and when to incorporate lenalidomide into treatment protocols for AL amyloidosis. Figure Figure


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 117 (24) ◽  
pp. 6721-6727 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luisa Giaccone ◽  
Barry Storer ◽  
Francesca Patriarca ◽  
Marcello Rotta ◽  
Roberto Sorasio ◽  
...  

Abstract Before the introduction of new drugs, we designed a trial where treatment of newly diagnosed myeloma patients was based on the presence or absence of HLA-identical siblings. First-line treatments included a cytoreductive autograft followed by a nonmyeloablative allograft or a second melphalan-based autograft. Here, we report long-term clinical outcomes and discuss them in the light of the recent remarkable advancements in the treatment of myeloma. After a median follow-up of 7 years, median overall survival (OS) was not reached (P = .001) and event-free survival (EFS) was 2.8 years (P = .005) for 80 patients with HLA-identical siblings and 4.25 and 2.4 years for 82 without, respectively. Median OS was not reached (P = .02) and EFS was 39 months (P = .02) in the 58 patients who received a nonmyeloablative allograft whereas OS was 5.3 years and EFS 33 months in the 46 who received 2 high-dose melphalan autografts. Among patients who reached complete remission in these 2 cohorts, 53% and 19% are in continuous complete remission. Among relapsed patients rescued with “new drugs,” median OS from the start of salvage therapy was not reached and was 1.7 (P = .01) years, respectively. Allografting conferred a long-term survival and disease-free advantage over standard autografting in this comparative study.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4616-4616
Author(s):  
Vishal K Gupta ◽  
Dina Brauneis ◽  
Anthony C Shelton ◽  
Karen Quillen ◽  
John Mark Sloan ◽  
...  

Abstract In light-chain (AL) amyloidosis, the depth of hematologic response has been shown to be associated with improved survival and organ responses. Bortezomib has been shown to be efficacious in achieving hematologic responses in AL amyloidosis. We conducted a trial utilizing bortezomib with dexamethasone for induction, bortezomib with high-dose melphalan (B-HDM) for conditioning, followed by stem cell transplantation for AL amyloidosis (Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier NCT01083316). The results of this clinical trial with a median follow-up of 36 months have been reported previously (Sanchorawala et al., 2015). We, here in, report the long-term results of this clinical trial, conducted from Jan 2010 to Aug 2013 with a median follow-up of 77.3 months (range, 55.4 to 100.1). The objectives of this follow-up report were to describe long-term survival, hematologic response and relapse rates, progression free survival and median time to organ response for patients treated on this clinical trial. As reported in the prior publication, patients received 2 cycles of induction with bortezomib 1.3mg/m2 and dexamethasone 20mg on day 1, 4, 8, 11 every 21 days followed by conditioning regimen of bortezomib 1mg/m2on day -6, -3, +1, +4 and HDM at 140-200mg/m2 in two divided doses on days -2 and -1 with transplantation of >2.5 x 106 autologous CD34+ cells/kg on day 0. Thirty-five patients were enrolled. Hematologic complete responses (CR) and very good partial responses (VGPR) were noted in 27/27 (100%) of assessable patients at 6 months and in 26/26 (100%) at 1 year following SCT. By intention-to-treat analysis, hematologic CR and VGPR were achieved by 27/35 (77%) at 6 months and 26/35 (74%) at 1 year following SCT. Hematologic relapse was defined as recurrence of a monoclonal protein on serum or urine IFE and/or abnormality of serum free light chain assay corresponding to their original clone. In contrast, biochemical relapse was defined as hematologic relapse without the progression of organ parameters. Renal progression was defined as 50% increase of 24-hour urine protein to >1g/day or 25% worsening of serum creatinine or creatinine clearance and cardiac progression was defined as NT-proBNP progression (>30% and >300 ng/mL increase), cTn progression (>30%) or LVEF progression (≥ 10% decrease). Of the 27 patients who achieved a hematologic CR or VGPR at 6 months, 4 patients had hematologic relapse at a median of 42.3 months (range, 34.5-63.0), 1 patient had organ (renal) progression despite maintaining a hematologic VGPR at 37 months and 4 had biochemical relapse at a median of 53 months (range, 49-79). Immunomodulatory agents and proteasome inhibitors were used in 2 and 3 patients with relapse, respectively. None of the patients with biochemical relapse required additional anti-plasma cell directed treatment at the time of last follow-up (median follow-up of 12.5 months; range, 7-44). Of the four who had hematologic relapse, two patients had achieved a VGPR at 6 months, and two had achieved a CR at 6 months. The median overall survival and progression-free survival are not yet reached (Figure). Eight deaths occurred in the follow up period. Two of these occurred in patients who did not proceed to SCT. Three occurred within 100 days of SCT. Three occurred in the subsequent follow-up period at 10.4, 55.0, and 80.1 months following enrollment attributed to worsening cardiac and renal function due to relapse of AL amyloidosis. The median time to renal response, defined as a 30% reduction in 24-hour urine protein in those with a baseline level of proteinuria over 0.5 g/24 hr, and in the absence of a worsening of estimated glomerular filtration rate by 25%, was 12 months (range, 6-24). The median time to cardiac response, defined as a reduction of B-type natriuretic peptide level by 30% with a baseline level greater than 100 pg/mL, was 6 months (range, 6-24). There were two cases of biopsy proven autologous graft-vs-host disease during periSCT period, and both these patients are alive and maintain a hematologic CR. In conclusion, incorporating bortezomib into induction and conditioning yielded durable hematologic responses of AL amyloidosis with corresponding cardiac and renal responses, and prolonged survival. This clinical trial was partly supported by Takeda Oncology. Figure. Figure. Disclosures Sloan: Stemline Therapeutics: Consultancy.


1994 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 764-768 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Cunningham ◽  
L Paz-Ares ◽  
M E Gore ◽  
J Malpas ◽  
T Hickish ◽  
...  

PURPOSE To present long-term follow-up data of patients with myeloma treated with high-dose melphalan HDM, including an assessment of prognostic factors. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between November 1981 and April 1986, 63 previously untreated patients with multiple myeloma received HDM 140 mg/m2 without autologous bone marrow transplantation. RESULTS The overall response rate was 82% (51 of 62), with 32% (20 of 62) patients entering complete remission (CR). The median duration of response was 18 months, and six patients remain alive and free from disease progression at 60+ to 84+ months. Improvements in quality of life associated with remission were immediate in terms of pain grade (89% of patients) and performance status (92%), and later in terms of bone healing (29%). Currently, at a median follow-up duration of 74 months (range, 63 to 100) since HDM, 23 patients are alive with a median survival duration of 47 months, and 35% of patients are expected to be alive at 9 years. Apart from early-stage disease, no factors were found to predict long-term survival. No second malignancies or other late side effects have been recorded. CONCLUSION Single-agent HDM without autologous bone marrow transplantation is a feasible therapeutic option in myeloma, and is associated with a high objective response rate, relatively long remission durations, and good symptom control.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (16) ◽  
pp. 2498-2506 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donna E. Reece ◽  
Ute Hegenbart ◽  
Vaishali Sanchorawala ◽  
Giampaolo Merlini ◽  
Giovanni Palladini ◽  
...  

Key Points Single-agent bortezomib produces durable hematologic responses and promising long-term overall survival in relapsed AL patients. Once-weekly bortezomib is better tolerated and produces similar responses to twice-weekly bortezomib in relapsed AL patients.


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